Welcome to the De Carvalho Lab

We are located at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, one of the top cancer research centers in the world. We are also part of the Department of Medical Biophysics at the University of Toronto, a world class university.
Our research focuses on understanding the epigenetic mechanisms underlying tumorigenesis and translate this knowledge into more efficient approaches for epigenetic therapy. We use a truly multi-disciplinary approach to discovery what mechanisms are driving the cancer-specific epigenetic alterations and translating this knowledge into more efficient epigenetic interventions. To achieve this goal, we combine advanced molecular and cellular biology techniques with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), epigenomics and computational biology.

Epigenetic Therapy

Epigenetic aberrations have been casually associated with cancer. Recent advancements in the rapidly evolving field of cancer epigenetics have shown extensive reprogramming of every component of the epigenetic machinery in cancer. Currently, drugs acting on DNA methyltransferases and histone deacetylases enzymes have already been FDA approved. This provides validation that pharmacological alteration of chromatin modifications has tangible clinical benefit. A new generation of drugs acting on a broad range of writers, erasers, and readers epigenetic enzymes are currently in clinical and pre-clinical evaluation. Our lab is interested in understanding their biological mechanism of action in the cancer cell and on the immune system.

Immunotherapy

Studying the potential to modulate the immune response against tumor cells is one of the most rapidly moving and exciting areas in clinical oncology today. In the last two decades, we have significantly improved our understanding of how the immune system interacts with cancer cells and how cancer can evade the immune response. This knowledge has led to the development of novel immunotherapy protocols, such as immune checkpoint blockade, with increasingly better clinical results. However, there is still a large proportion of patients that do not respond to cancer immunotherapy alone. Recent work from our lab suggests that DNA demethylating drugs can induce an innate immune activation on cancer cells, a process we named ‘viral mimicry’. This process may prime cancer cells for an immune response, highlighting the potential to combine epigenetic therapy with immunotherapy.

Cancer-initiating cells

Many tumor types are organized as a cellular hierarchy sustained by a subpopulation of cancer-initiating cells (CICs). These CICs possess unique features, including long-term self-renewal, the ability to initiate tumor growth in xenograft models, and the ability to differentiate into the bulk of the tumor mass. CICs are believed to play a major role in tumor relapse and patient survival, suggesting that therapeutic strategies targeting this cell population would be highly beneficial to patient outcome. Our lab recently published that DNA demethylating agents can target colorectal CICs, highlighting the potential to use epigenetic therapy to target tumor relapse.